THE WORLD WAR TWO GROUP discussion

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The Liberator
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2012 - December - "The Liberator" by Alex Kershaw



(view spoiler) - Now that's a combat leader!

It's not hard to get promoted in the infantry if you do your job and stay alive. The problem is staying alive.

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Below is a link to Technical Sergeant Jim Rutledge’s citation:
http://militarytimes.com/citations-me...


Description:
Originally written while the author was a prisoner of the US Army in 1945-46, Black Edelweiss is a boon to serious historians and WWII buffs alike. In a day in which most memoirs are written at half a century's distance, the former will be gratified by the author's precise recall facilitated by the chronologically short-range (a matter of one to seven years) at which the events were captured in writing. Both will appreciate and enjoy the abundantly detailed, exceptionally accurate combat episodes.
Even more than the strictly military narrative, however, the author has crafted a searingly candid view into his own mind and soul. As such, Black Edelweiss is much more than a "ripping yarn" or a low-level military history. Black Edelweiss joins not only the growing body of German military memoirs, but the more select, more narrowly-focused group of personal memoirs by other Waffen-SS enlisted men. Beyond the microcosmic view of combat these books relate to the extent that they are honest and candid such books are important for what they can reveal about their authors' motivations and reflections on those impulses and their consequences. To date, these works differ significantly.
As it joins the ranks of the books in this genre, Black Edelweiss makes a unique and very important contribution. It is a true, personal account of the author's war years, first at school and then with the Waffen-SS, which he joined early in 1943 at the age of seventeen. For a year and a half, the author fought as a machine gunner in SS-Mountain Infantry Regiment 11 Reinhard Heydrich, mainly in the arctic and sub-arctic reaches of Soviet Karelia and Finland, and later at the Western frontier of the Third Reich. The characters in the story are real, and the conversations and actions are recounted to the best of his ability from the short distance at which he wrote the manuscript in 1945-46.
Apart from the piercing insights into the question of why the German soldier fought as he did, what makes this book truly unique is the author's anguished, yet resolute examination of the dialectic between the honorable and valorous comportment of his comrades and the fundamentally reprehensible conduct of about 35,000 men behind the front lines who nevertheless wore the same uniform.
During his captivity, the author was assigned for a time as a clerk to a US Army Judge Advocate General's Corps officer, and in the performance of his administrative duties, the author had access to the mounting reams of documentation of the Holocaust. His growing recognition of the involvement of Waffen-SS personnel in the monstrous crimes of that process caused him to dig deeply into his soul, to examine his most intimate and private motivations and thoughts, and to reevaluate the most basic assumptions of his life to that point. The author captured this process and the result in the notes which became this book.
Honestly, forthrightly, and courageously told, Black Edelweiss is a precious gift to historians and other students of World War II. It not only provides a glimpse into the attributes that made the German armed forces a formidable and tenacious foe, but squarely confronts the most painful issue facing German World War II veterans in general, and Waffen-SS veterans in particular.

Haven't gotten to chapter seven yet (not because it's not a good book--I'm just trying to finish up another book at the same time), but I thought the picture at the beginning of chapter two of Sparks and his future wife was cute. It's not often that you call a picture in a book like this cute.

I wonder if the author included that picture to make Felix more human in the book do you think?
You will find an amazing selection of chapter pictures throughout the book, well chosen by the author.

What did other readers think of the incident between Voss and his machine gun crew and Sparks rescuing injured men (page 204)?
This account gives you an idea of how intense the fighting must have been and what sort of combat leader Sparks was, from page 205:
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Also this account taken from page 215 of the book:
(view spoiler) - Do folks think this is a fair assessment or a petty and offensive action by a pissed off commander?

I wonder if the author included that picture to make Felix more human in the book do you think?
You will find an amazing selection of chapter..."
I agree--good choice on the pictures I've seen so far. And the early chapters do a good job of making Felix feel real. The poverty, joining the army because he's broke and doesn't have anything else going for him, the photo-developing side business. Doesn't take up much of the book, but does a great job of setting everything else up.

How are you finding the book so far?

THE BATTLE OF ASCHAFFENBURG: AN EXAMPLE OF LATE WORLD WAR II URBAN COMBAT IN EUROPE:
http://www.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/...
This battle is covered in the book starting on page 231.

I wonder if the AWOL thing was because N. Africa didn't know where he was, or because he angered the hospital staff.

I think I feel bad for their wife/mother. That picture is one more example of how hard war can be for families. Can you imagine the worry those two must have felt every time a shell exploded?

Here are a few thoughts from early in the book (no page numbers because the kindle edition doesn't have them--some publishers add them, but not this one):
from chapter three: the waves were more than nine feet as the craft bucked and bounced toward their assigned landing area. Makes me seasick. And reminds me of a quote from another book I read recently,

For those who have never travelled by LCI, my advice is the same as for plagues, and that is at all costs to avoid them. They are small and smelly, and although I am normally a reasonably good sailor, these craft invariably make me sick.
I'm amazed the troops could fight after riding to the beaches like that--but they did it, over and over again.
There's this, from chapter five, showing yet another way you can get killed during war--death from translation errors. (view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>



Description:
The first book-length account of the initial phase of Operation NORDWIND, the last German offensive on the Western Front in World War II, Seven Days in January is also a personal memoir by a key participant. For perspective, the author includes a detailed, yet concise, summary of his division's operations during three years of combat against the Soviets on the Arctic Front near Murmansk, and its epic 1,000-mile fighting withdrawal across Finland and Norway after the Finns concluded a separate armistice with the USSR in 1944. With this as background, the author focuses on a day-by-day description and analysis of Operation NORDWIND, based on not only his personal experience in the campaign, but on extensive use of both German and American archival sources and dozens of interviews with the combatants of both sides. A gripping and detailed account of an important, yet until now obscure unit's participation in the last critical contest on the Western Front in WWII.

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makes an appearance here from the other side
of the fence. as the summary sez, Voss writing it
right after the war gives it an honesty.
'Aussie Rick' wrote: "On page 182 we are introduced to Johann Voss, a machine gunner in SS-Mountain Infantry Regiment 11 Reinhard Heydrich. I have a copy of this book, signed by the author, so I better get around to rea..."


I think I'm not too impressed with General Clark. Maybe it's poetic justice that his big day was so quickly overshadowed by the Normandy D-day.

I love reading about little acts of mercy in such a horrible war (thinking of Voss's machine gun crew). I can see why Spark's men had so much respect for him--he really cared about them. That battle must have been so hard on Sparks after going through the Battle of the caves in Anzio.
Another poignant story involving mercy was Harry Eisner and his squad trying to save the injured German schoolgirl right before the surrender of Aschaffenburg. (sorry I don't have the page number--I think it's a few pages before the second photo insert.)

I agree with you A.L. about the incident with Harry Eisner trying to save the injured German schoolgirl at Aschaffenburg and how her eyes never left him even as she was being driven away - I wonder what happened to her?



thanks for such nice comments
bst\
alex kershaw


Also this account t..."
After finishing the book (loved it!), I think Sparks and Frederick were both strong personalities under a lot of stress. I'm glad things got better between them. I think Frederick should have given him the DSC. I got the impression that Sparks was going against the norm when he went to save his men rather than performing his "customary duty."

Hope the colonel did his homework next time he talked to a Thunderbird. That was a great quote. (view spoiler)

The author took us on a pretty good journey with Sparks and his men and I really enjoyed the book as well.


I think you will enjoy it, well I hope you do :)
Let us know what you think as you get into it, happy reading!

It is ironic in light of last week's Sandy Hook School shootings that Sparks fought against the NRA for more gun control - good for him!


Which book do you think you will read first?
Books mentioned in this topic
Seven Days in January: With the 6th 55-Mountain Division in Operation Nordwind (other topics)Stretchers Not Available: The Wartime Story of Dr Jim Rickett (other topics)
Black Edelweiss: A Memoir of Combat and Conscience by a Soldier of the Waffen-Ss (other topics)
The Liberator: One World War II Soldier's 500-Day Odyssey from the Beaches of Sicily to the Gates of Dachau (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Wolf T. Zoepf (other topics)Johann Voss (other topics)
Alex Kershaw (other topics)
The riveting true story of the bloodiest and most dramatic march to victory of the Second World War, following the battlefield odyssey of a maverick U.S. Army officer and his infantry unit as they fought from the invasion of Italy to the liberation of Dachau at war's end.
From July 10, 1943, the date of the Allied landing in Sicily, to May 8, 1945, when victory in Europe was declared-roughly 500 days-no regiment saw more action, and no single platoon, company, or battalion endured worse, than the one commanded by Felix Sparks, a greenhorn second lieutenant when The Liberator begins. Historian Alex Kershaw vividly portrays the immense courage and stamina of Sparks and his men as they fought terrifying engagements against Hitler's finest troops in Sicily and Salerno and as they endured attack after attack on the beaches of Anzio (with Sparks miraculously emerging as his 200-man company's sole survivor).
In the bloody battle for southern France, Sparks led his reconstituted unit into action against superbly equipped and trained die-hard SS troops and demonstrated how the difference between defeat and victory would be a matter of character, not tactics or hardware. Finally, he and his men were ordered to liberate Dachau, the Nazis' first concentration camp. It would be their greatest challenge, a soul-searing test of their humanity.